Bafing River

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File:10.34748W 13.10430N.png
Lake Manantali with the Manantali Dam and the Bafing River
File:PARK(1800) p317 Die hängende Brücke über den Bafing.jpg
A hanging bridge over the Bafing (published 1800)

The Bafing River (Manding for "black river", French: Rivière Bafing)[1] is the upper course and largest tributary of the Senegal River which runs through Guinea and Mali and is about Script error: No such module "convert". long.

Course

The Fonta Djallon in Guinea is the source of the Bafing River,[2] Script error: No such module "convert". north of Mamou.[1] It flows for about Script error: No such module "convert".[3] and converges with the Bakoy River to join the Senegal River in western Africa.[4][5] The Bafing River is the largest tributary of the Senegal River, and contributes almost half of its total water volume.[6] The Bafing forms part of the international border between Guinea and Mali.[7]

Irrigation

Flooding from the Bafing River along the Senegal River had been traditionally relied on as a means of supporting local agriculture. However, a drought in the 1970s necessitated the construction of dams on both the Bafing River and the Senegal River. The Manantali hydroelectric dam, completed in 1987,[8] is located on the Bafing River Script error: No such module "convert". upstream of Bafoulabé. It forms the largest artificial lake in Mali, Lake Manantali. The dam retains Script error: No such module "convert". of water which is used to power the turbines during the dry season. As a result, the intensity of the maximum flood downstream of the dam has been reduced but during the dry season, a flow of between Script error: No such module "convert". and Script error: No such module "convert". is maintained.[9]

Ecology

There may be a significant chimpanzee population in the area east of the Bafing River.[10] The blue-headed bee-eater (merops muelleri) has also been sighted at the forest on the river south of the Manding Mountains.[11]

References

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